The Great MP3 Bitrate Test: My Ears Versus Yours

There will be no judgment in this post. No sound snobbery. I’m simply asking the age-old question: At what bitrate should we encode MP3s? And I need your help.

This test is occurring in two parts. In part one, I’m sampling three songs chosen from vastly different genres, encoded from CD and transcoded into the various popular bitrates available for MP3s (64k, 96, 128, 160, 192, 256, and 320kbps with VBR off). I tell you what I hear, then you sample the files yourself, and tell me what you hear.

Part I – My Test
I’m sitting here with Pioneer’s brand-new VSX-1019AH-K receiver, a $500 model that actually pulls the MP3 data off of USB drives and iProducts for decoding within the receiver itself. (According to Pioneer, this “Advanced Sound Retriever” technology restores sound lost in the MP3 conversion process, so I figure it’s the best MP3 experience I’m gonna get.)

The sound is being sent through 14 gauge Monoprice speaker wire to twin Definitive Mythos STS Supertowers ($3,000/pair). We wanted to assemble an ideal, nice home audio system that could make MP3s sound their best. We feel that this combination of superb speakers and MP3 decoding reaches a reasonable benchmark for the reasonable enough price of around $3,500. Since most readers including me aren’t going to run out and buy anything nicer, it represents a decent ceiling of audio quality.

Pure Prairie League – Woman
My first pass, I couldn’t hear a difference beyond 128. And it was a little worrisome. But no judgment, that’s the rule! I took another pass…things did seem to get better…but was I imagining it?

So I skipped from 128 to 192. Then I could hear an improvement as the instruments were unchanged but the vocals grew more lifelike. Songs encoded beyond 192 sounded different in terms of balance, but not necessarily any better. I wonder if, since the song was “digitally remastered,” studio technicians compressed the audio to begin with.
My conclusion: 192

Gorillaz – Feel Good Inc.
It was a total shock. I could hear the differences in bitrates, all the way to the top, the first pass through the list. I had assumed, whatever, some electronic type music. It won’t matter. But even the jump from 192 to 256 was dramatic on my system, with every enhancement giving me more detail in the laugh and a richer, wetter bass line.
My conclusion: 320

Bizet – Carmen Suite #1
During my quick first pass, I didn’t hear a difference beyond 160. Skipping intervals, I found no improvement going from 160 to 192, but a noticeable improvement from 160 to 256. The middle just feels fuller, with a far more lifelike reverb to the low to mid horn section. I’d like to say that I heard a difference up to 320, but I’m willing to chalk that up to the power of suggestion.
My conclusion: 256

Also, I compared the 320kbps recordings to their uncompressed WAV counterparts. The only difference I could hear was in the Pure Prairie League’s Woman. The vocals and high level instrumentation felt ever so less harsh. It’s a bit ironic, as that was the song I had the biggest problem distinguishing bitrates in the first place.

Back when I tested my ear in college, I found the cutoff to be 160, and have since encoded all of my music at that level (though it’s become less of an issue now that MP3s are more often downloaded than ripped from CDs). Now, however, it’s pretty apparent that with more hard drive space and a nicer audio system—my earlier testing was just on a set of decent computer speakers—it might be worth reassessing my encoding rates. In just these three songs, I found a huge fluctuation, and not in any way I intended. Honestly, I figured that Carmen would require the best bitrate to assuage my ear.

Now, I wouldn’t encode lower than 192kbps, and I’d be tempted to push the boundaries to 256kbps and 320kbps on the music I planned on listening to very closely, though my laptop’s hard drive would probably hate me for it.

Part II – Your Test
Enough with me talking, now it’s your turn. You’ll find the files you need below alongside an accompanying poll. Please don’t vote based upon past experience or my subjective impressions, and feel free to test on any system you like (as long as you note it in the survey).

Oh, and the easiest way to peruse the files quickly is to click the first audio link, let it load in your browser, then just change the bitrate number in the filename up in the address bar—fast and easy to do any side-by-side comparison you like. Well, at least on your crappy computer speakers.

TEST FILES

DOWNLOAD THEM IN ONE BIG ZIP HERE (MediaFire), or use individual links through your browser below:

Woman 64
Woman 96
Woman 128
Woman 160
Woman 192
Woman 256
Woman 320
Woman WAV

Feel Good 64
Feel Good 96
Feel Good 128
Feel Good 160
Feel Good 192
Feel Good 256
Feel Good 320
Feel Good WAV

Carmen 64
Carmen 96
Carmen 128
Carmen 160
Carmen 192
Carmen 256
Carmen 320
Carmen WAV

And here is the survey (CLICK THROUGH TO NEW PAGE)

Hands-On With Sony Series-X Walkman

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Remember that time Sony invented the portable music player? But then refused to embrace the MP3 format? And wound up getting burned by Apple when the iPod came out?

Sony certainly remembers.

After years of trial and error with various substandard on-the-go media players, Sony is finally flexing its competitive muscle with the Series-X: an OLED-flaunting, Slacker-enabled, web-browsing, noise-canceling device proudly flying under the banner of “Walkman.”

Sony dropped off an early build of the X Tuesday. Here are our impressions after fiddling with it for the last 12 hours. Keep in mind that this isn’t a full test; these are just our initial reactions after playing with hardware that’s not 100 percent fully baked yet.
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The Hardware

Typical Sony (i.e., freaking nice). It looks like a Danger Mouse–style mashup between a Microsoft Zune and an iPod Touch. Flanking the sides are controls for volume and noise canceling. Noise canceling is actually handled by the included earbuds — you can just switch the feature on and off from the body of the device.

The 3-inch touchscreen is by far the X’s best feature. Brilliant, colorful, and OLED-based, it’s also super-duper sensitive. I’m talking iPhone levels of sensitivity. I hate, hate, hate comparing every touchscreen-based electronic device we handle to an iPhone or iPod, but they represent the gold standard for touch-based input. And the X-series can hang with any Cupertino device in terms of touch sensitivity.

The User Interface

The menus are set up in a logical grid. Icons let you access Slacker, the FM radio, YouTube, still images, the video player, music, noise canceling options, podcasts, the Web browser and the X’s internal settings. If you want to select something, merely touch it, the icon illuminates, and a small bubble pops up above it and indicates the application you’re selecting. Input ambiguity? There really is none. Provided you’re not typing a URL. (We’ll get to that later.)

Music Player

You can sort by song, artist, genre, release year, playlist or file folder. You can also link individual tracks on Yahoo One Search or YouTube for videos. I immediately brought up Ice Ice Baby on the device, linked it to YouTube, and within seconds was watching Robert Van Winkler prance about in a black-and-silver-sequined power suit.

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Slacker!

Most intriguing of all the features on the phone is the inclusion of the Slacker software. For those of you unfamiliar with the service, it’s a lot like Last.FM or Pandora. You get a 30-day free trial before you have to register. You manage your stations from a PC first, then mix and listen to them with the Slacker software.

Podcasts

We were able to get onto podcast.com and eventually download both the Gadget Lab podcast and the Wired Playlist audio podacst. It took a little bit of poking around (podcast.com has a terrible search function) but we were able to do it within a few minutes.

FM Radio

I’m not sure why this is necessary, since there’s a Web browser in place. Want to listen to NPR? Go to npr.com.

Web Browser

Meh. Not so hot. The browser frequently resizes web pages in odd ways and doesn’t display graphics effectively. What’s more irksome is entering URLs. Typing text into the URL bar is painstaking, typo-prone and tedious.

File Support

MP3, WMA, AAC/L-PCM + Video,  AVC(H.264/AVC), MPEG-4, WMV DRM

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What We Think

I like the damn thing. While it’s not as polished as an iPod, it’s certainly more smartly assembled than the oafish Zune. What’s better, it has a few features the iPod Touch doesn’t: Slacker service, physical buttons, integrated noise canceling. What’s worse, though, is a web browser that’s fairly crappy. Inputting text is frustrating and error-prone, and the battery doesn’t seem to last more than five hours of continuous use.

Overall, this is a nicely appointed, well-featured device. I’m just surprised there isn’t a phone built into it somewhere.

The X-series Walkman is available for pre-sale now and will start shipping in the middle of June.

UPDATE: Prices will be $299 for 16GB and $399 for 32GB.

Scroll down for the full spec list from the Sony press release.

Photos by Jon Snyder/ Wired.com

Sony X-series Walkman®
A slim noise-canceling video MP3 player

Product Bullets:
•    OLED Video experience with a high quality 3” wide display (WQVGA)
•    Incredible sound quality with digital clear audio technologies, S-Master™ digital amplifier and digital noise canceling with airplane, train, bus and office mode
•    New content experience: Podcast download, YouTube™ streaming, Yahoo!® search, Music Meta Link, Slacker® Personal Radio
•    Multi Audio/Video Codec support: Music – MP3/WMA/AAC/L-PCM and Video – AVC(H.264/AVC)/MPEG-4/WMV DRM
•    Hybrid Operation system allows you touch panel & buttons operation
•    13.5 mm Noise Canceling EX Headphones included MDR-NC020
•    FM Tuner
Key Features:
•    Quality of Sound: Digital clear audio technologies, S-Master™ digital amplifier, digital noise canceling function with Noise Canceling EX headphones (MDR-NC20)
•    Discover Music: Slacker® radio offers free personalized music that uploads to your Walkman® player when the player is connected to a wireless LAN and when you are in a WiFi zone (Slacker registration is required after 30 days).
•    OLED Display: OLED technology has a response time suitable for movie playback. A wide viewing angle of nearly 180 degrees gives consistent tone and stable contrast, as well as, a wide range of color reproduction and a high contrast ratio.
•    Hybrid Operation: The benefit of both “touch panel” and “button” operation makes the X series easy to use while using its different features.
•    Internet Connectivity:
o    Podcast download, register podcast on browser and link to podcast web site
o    “Related Links” function relates web content with music content playing on your Walkman® X series
o    Connect directly to “YouTube™” and “Yahoo!®”
o    Internet Browser
o    Wireless LAN (Wi-Fi) connectivity to Home Wireless LAN and to public Wireless LAN. Supports Wi-Fi Protected Setup
•    Drag and Drop Functionality: Easily load your music, pictures, and video onto this player by dragging and dropping them into the video MP3 player on your computer.
•    Multiple High-quality Video Formats: This player supports multiple high-quality video formats as well as a variety of audio codecs, giving you more freedom to download the kind of music and video that you want.
•    Long Battery Life: Equipped with a long-lasting battery that enables you to listen to up to 33 hours of music and watch up to 9 hours of video without needing to recharge.
Audio
•    Antenna System: FM: Headphone Cord Antenna
•    Audio Power Output: 5 + 5mW
•    Equalizer: 5 Band: Heavy/Pop/Jazz/Unique/Custom1/Custom2
•    Format(s) Supported: Audio: MP3/WMA/AAC/L-PCM, Video: AVC(H.264/AVC)/MPEG-4/WMV DRM
•    Frequency Range: 87.5 to 108.0 MHz
•    Frequency Response: 20 – 20,000Hz
•    Tuner: Yes – FM
Audio Features
•    Sound Mode : 5 Band equalizer (Heavy/Pop/Jazz/Unique/Custom 1/Custom 2) and Clear Bass
•    Surround Effect : DSEE (on/off)
Capability
•    MP3 Player : Yes
•    Radio : Yes
Convenience Features
•    Multiple Language Display : English/French/German/Spanish/Italian/Russian/Japanese/Simplified Chinese/Traditional Chinese/Korean/Portuguese
•    Search Features : All Songs/Album/Artist/Genre/Release Year/Playlists/Folder
Display
•    Screen Size : 3.0” WIDE OLED Display (WQVGA)
General
•    Music Storage Capacity (Approx) : 16GB or 32GB
•    Recommended Use : Music/Video/Photo/FM/Podcast/Internet Browser/YouTube
Hardware
•    Display : 3-inch, OLED color display, WQVGA (432 x 240 Pixels), 262,144 colors
•    Headphone Type : MDR-NC020
•    System Requirements : Computer: IBM PC/AT or compatible computer preinstalled with the following Windows operating systems: – Windows® XP Home Edition (Service Pack 2 or later) – Windows® XP Professional (Service Pack 2 or later) – Windows Vista® Home Basic (Service Pack 1 or later) – Windows Vista® Home Premium (Service Pack 1 or later) – Windows Vista® Business (Service Pack 1 or later) – Windows Vista® Ultimate (Service Pack 1 or later) Excluding OS Versions not supported by Microsoft. Excluding Windows® XP Professional x64 Edition. Excluding 64-bit OS versions for use with PC application software “Media Manager for Walkman”.
Inputs and Outputs
•    Headphone Jack : Yes
•    Headphone Output(s) : 1 (stereo mini jack)
Memory
•    Memory Size : 16GB or 32GB
•    User Memory Capacity (Approx.) : Flash
Power
•    Battery Charging (Approx) : USB-based charging Approx. 3 Hrs(full charge), Approx. 1.5 Hrs(approx. 80%)
•    Power Type : Built-in Rechargeable Li-ion Battery USB power (from a computer via the supplied USB cable)
System Requirements
•    Internet Connection : Yes (wi-fi)
Video
•    Playback : Mode: Normal/Repeat/Shuffle/Shuffle&Repeat/Repeat 1 Song
Video Features
•    JPEG Playback : Yes
Weights and Measurements
•    Dimensions (Approx.) : W 2 1/8 x H 3 7/8 x D 13/32 inches
•    Weight (Approx.) : 3.5 oz
Supplied Accessories
•    CD-ROM (”Window’s Media Player 11″, “Media Manager for Walkman”, “Content Transer”,” Operation Guide”)
•    Earbud headphones (S,M,L)
•    Quick Start Guide
•    USB Cable
•    Attachment
•    Audio input cable
•    Plug adapter for in-flight use (single/dual)


Hercules Unveils DJ-Focused USB Audio Interface

Hercules_DeeJay_Trim_4-6.jpg

USB audio interfaces are a dime a dozen these days, now that GarageBand, SONAR 8 Studio, Logic Express 8, and other low-cost digital audio workstation software has rocketed music recording to stardom among independent musicians. In a unique twist, Hercules has unveiled the DeeJay Trim 4&6, a USB audio interface that’s designed specifically for DJs–perhaps those who already have a control surface but lack a proper input and output setup.

The unit features four channels of output, including two balanced jacks (+4dBu) for PA gear, and two -10dBv RCA outputs for mixing decks and regular amps. Users can also switch the config to allow for two inputs and six outputs: for example, if someone wants to hook in two stereo tracks to an external mixing deck, while flying in a third for samples and loops.

The line inputs, meanwhile, let you connect and mix in an iPod or external CD player, along with a phono level input for connecting vinyl turntables. It also features steel casing, two handles mounted on the sides, and four wide non-slip pads for stability. The DeeJay Trim 4&6 will hit stores in June for $249.99, and works with Windows XP, Vista, and Mac OS X 10.4 and 10.5 systems.

How Tech Changed the Way We Listen to Music

Technology always helped bring the listener closer to the music. Progressing from wax tubes, to records, to cassettes, to CDs, each jump has benefited the music fan. But maybe it’s gone a bit too far.

The History

Admittedly, new music formats have always changed the way we listen to music. However, I don’t think any have had such an effect over the last 60 years as the move to MP3 and other digital file formats. The advent of the 45 RPM single in the 50s is arguably the first big shift in the way popular music was consumed. Records went from longer-playing 78s and 33s, to the cheaper 45 format, which carried two or three songs on a disc, and became much more accessible for mass consumption. Soon, every big pop artist was releasing their big hits on 45s, and this became the main mode of consumption.

Then came cassettes, which shrank down the record onto magnetic film and brought the long-playing album back into vogue. Cassingles also remained popular among consumers, but the idea of the album as the main purchase was gaining steam again because tapes were more durable and easier to store. It also made it possible for people to record their own mixes very easily.

But the problem with all these analog formats is that they wore down and degraded over time. Vinyl lost it’s sound quality the more you played it, scratched easily, and storing it in the wrong place climate would warp it’s shape. Tapes would sound muffled over time, and the actual tape could easily be spooled out from the cassette.

Enter the Compact Disc. Created as a way to prevent the degradation of sound over time, the compact disc ushered in the digital era of music, but it wasn’t without complaints. Audiophiles said the sound was cold and sterile, and purists worried about the idea you could skip around the album order so easily, that albums were meant to be listened to sequentially, and not on one-track repeat for hits. It also wasn’t impervious, still liable to scratching and subsequent choppy playback. Still, it was the best available option to get music to consumers, until the MP3.

Too Much Music

Sometimes, I feel the rise of MP3s made music too easy to obtain. Instead of taking time to appreciate good work, we now devour as much music as we possibly can. My music collection feels increasingly impersonal, to the point that I have albums I’ve forgot I downloaded. Sometimes I’ll listen to an album I like just once, and never touch it again. Why?

Because at any given time, I have about 10-20 other new albums I’m wanting to check out. There’s just not enough time to give every album the same attention, and when you try to really get into a handful of albums, you miss out on 100 other new releases.

The MP3 era is enabling the music junkie’s futile quest to stay up on all music, at all times.

But that’s not to say it’s all bad. Albums that used to take me months to track down in the past can be found with a few minutes of google ingenuity. I’ve been able to listen to artists I might have only known by name in the past, and not have to wait for corporate America to make their music accessible to the masses.

Narrowing Tastes

Despite the greatly enhanced variety of music available to the average music listener, I feel like people’s tastes are actually narrowing, more than they’re branching out. Sure, the hardcore music fan will go out and dig out obscure artists in 20 different genres. But for the casual indie rock fan, it’s just as easy to go out and find 20 other bands who sound just like Sigur Ros.

As a result, you find people digging deeper into genres that they really like, while ignoring the access they have to so many other great genres. The rise of internet forums and communities based around certain kinds of music have only helped listeners to identify with other like-minded individuals and firmly entrench themselves.

However, the rise of unclassifiable, genre-free music this decade would seem to go against my notion of narrowing tastes. Fans have embraced musicians who pull from a variety of seemingly unrelated influences, and reassemble the parts into a whole new beast.

Artists as big as Timbaland, as small as the Avalanches, as weird as Flying Lotus, or as colorful as M.I.A have all made a name for themselves by consciously ignoring the boundaries of genre. And as a result, I’ve seen myself and many of my friends digging into genres, past and present, they previously had ignored. We’re better music fans because of this.

The Death of the Album, The Rise of Musical A.D.D.

I blame the iPod. Before MP3s, when you wanted to listen to something, you at least had to insert a complete album, or at least take the time to piece together a mixtape. Tracklists meant more back then, because it was more difficult to rearrange the order (save for the skip/shuffle functions).

These days, you can crap out whatever you want into an unfocused playlist and take it on the go. Add or subtract songs in a matter of seconds, it’s a thought-free process. There’s no need to give a whole album the time of day anymore when you can just add your favorite. We all have Musical A.D.D.

But the truth is, I’m just being a paranoid purist. When CDs first came out, vinyl purists lamented how too many tracks were packed into the 74-minute capacity discs, and how easily people could just switch from track to track. Before that, the entire pop music culture was formed around 45 RPM singles in the 50s and 60s.

So while the crotchety old man in me wants to say that we need to preserve the complete album, the truth is that it’s significance among music fans has always changed and evolved.

As much I want to say MP3s have ruined all our listening habits, the truth is, they’ve just pushed us into the next wave of music culture. Maybe it means the album tracklist really is dead. Maybe I’ll only listen to a complete album once or twice from here on out. Or maybe it just means people need to start making more interesting albums worthy of such attention.

Cheap Geek: Philips MP3 Player, iPhone Car Charger, Jensen HD Radio

PhilipsMP3.jpgHere at Cheap Geek Central, we all have tattoos of Scrooge McDuck. He’s our idol.

1. Some makers of portable music players say you shouldn’t get a screen for $79.99. “Just listen in random order, peons,” they say. (I may have invented the “peons” part.) But the good people at NewEgg.com say no, this tyranny must end. Get a Philips 2GB MP3 player with a 1.8.-inch display for $79.99, they say. The one without the screen is going to sell a billion more units, but this is still a great deal.

2. Speaking of MP3 players, Amazon has a fantastic deal on an iPhone 3G car charger. This simple white charger is only $0.97, which is one of the cheapest deals every to appear in this space. Shipping adds a paltry $2.98 more.

3. Let’s say you want an HD radio for your car. Maybe you love that 3-second delay when switching stations. Well, Amazon has a deal for you. Get a Jensen HD5112 HD radio for $109.07, and it ships for free. The radio also lets you play MP3 and WMA files from CD-R/RW discs, an SD card, or a USB connection.

Alesis Introduces AudioLink USB Cables

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Alesis, the venerable pro audio company and pioneer of the (now-defunct) ADAT format, has launched its AudioLink series of consumer recording products that apparently redefine the floor for low-cost recording gear.

Get this: the new line includes GuitarLink, a quarter-inch-jack-to-USB cable, MicLink, an XLR3-to-USB cable, and LineLink, a stereo-quarter-inch-jack-to-USB cable. That basically means that with these devices, you don’t even need a USB audio interface for your PC or Mac. Each one acts as a plug-and-play device under Windows or Mac OS X, outputs 16-bit, 44.1 KHz digital audio due to its internal D/A converters, and balances the levels appropriately in each case.

My gut says that these won’t sound the same as an Apogee Ensemble. But for personal recording projects on a budget, they could be just the ticket, particularly if you play just one instrument. (If you’re recording different instruments and vocals over time, it probably still makes sense to buy an inexpensive interface that’s more flexible.) MicLink and LineLink cost $49 each, while GuitarLink costs $39. All three are available in stores now.

Discovering Music in 2009: The New Tools

MTV doesn’t play music videos. Magazines are dying. Radio is all about the $$$. It’s no secret the old modes of music discovery have been thrown out the window. Thankfully, new music-finders are here:

I think anyone reading this understands that the internet is the new trading post for artists, listeners, critics and salesmen. It’s impossible to avoid some of the marketing campaigns carried out on MySpace and YouTube, but mostly music’s move to the internet gives listeners more power to develop their own tastes, for better or for worse. You can turn to MP3 stores, recommendation services, internet radio and podcasts, MySpace—and even personal music blogs and forums that’ll help you “sample” pirated music. Here’s my take on each method of discovery and the relevance it has to listeners:

Recommendation Services

The Pandoras, Rhapsodys and Last.fms of the world are nice, because they do most of the discovery work for you, without pushing some corporate agenda on you behind the scenes (…ahem…Clear Channel). Even better, these services cater their first song selections around your initially revealed tastes, and as you give the software feedback as to what you like and don’t like, they continue to refine and improve their artist recommendations. Zune’s Mixview also provides a similar service, visually recommending similar artists and songs to those already in your library.

But my problem with a service like this is that you don’t necessarily get music that’s really new or groundbreaking. Sure, it might be new or exciting to the casual music fan, or just someone who spends all their time listening to these services, but for the true junkie—okay, maybe “music snob”—it’s hard to really be wowed by any of these services. We’ve seen and heard most of it before.

MP3 Stores

Sometimes looking for new music to actually buy is a great way to discover new stuff. Whenever I stop through the legendary Amoeba Records in SF to buy actual, real CDs and vinyl, half my stack is full of stuff I’m completely unfamiliar with. The same holds true with MP3 stores.

Whether it’s the monoliths like the iTunes and Amazon mp3 stores, or smaller music peddlers like Boomkat, Bleep, Beatport or Juno, most these stores not only let you click through and listen to all the 30-clips you can handle, but they have tons of recommendations in the sidebars, allowing you to explore similar artists and sounds. The only problem with this? If you don’t want to buy all these tracks, hunting them down again is a drag. And in the case of some of the more obscure stores, you might not find the songs anywhere else.

Internet Radio and Podcasts
The beautiful thing about radio in its prime was that, top hits and genres-aside, you never knew what you were going to hear at any specific moment. That unpredictability has an addictive quality to it, and internet radio preserves that spirit to a degree. Though not as popular in the era of the iPod, I still tune in to internet radio stations when I’m feeling bored with my music collection.

Two of my personal favorites are KCRW out of LA, which sticks to indie and the non-top-40 pop hits, and Rinse FM out of London, which has a current rotation of DJs spinning Grime, Dubstep, House and whatever other electronic genres are currently bubbling over there. My favorite thing about these two stations are that they put the content above all else—playing music they like, and not necessarily music that will sell. (On perhaps the complete other end of the music spectrum, Wilson recommends similarly free-minded stations WFUV in New York, and KEXP in Seattle.)

The risk you run in your path of discovery, however, is that if your ears are at the mercy of the DJ you’re listening to on internet radio, and if you don’t like their taste, hard luck.

MySpace and Twitter

This is what I sort of view as the great democratic project in music. The complaint while the internet was in its infancy was that big media and big corporations had too much influence over what music made it, and what didn’t. Obviously that’s all changed, in large part to MySpace.

As a social media service at large, MySpace is an eyesore and an abomination. But as a place to discover new music, believe it or not, it’s an invaluable goldmine. Big artists, small artists, fat artists, skinny artists—hell, your mom—all have the same basic framework at their dispersal to reach the masses when they’re using MySpace. Here you can find your favorite established artists sneaking new tracks up on their page, you can find work from newer artists who have no official releases out, or you can stumble upon that completely random, brilliant band of 17-year-olds from Pawnee, Oklahoma throwing out avant-garde acid pop.

But the best part, is that you can click around their grid of friends, who most of the time are other musicians, and you can get lost in musical worlds you didn’t know existed. I spent eight hours doing this one night last winter, and found enough new artists and styles that kept me interested for the rest of the year.

On the Twitter side, it’s mostly just good for gathering names and news, but the fact that more musicians, writers and other people of interest are using the service to jot down thoughts means you get to see what they’re into at any given moment. People ranging from The Root’s ?uestlove, to The New Yorker’s music writer Sasha Frere-Jones, to Diplo all twitter frequently about the new music they’re digging at the time.

The Online Music Media

The big music magazines, like Rolling Stone and The Source, went from influential and respected in their prime for their great taste and writing, to walking punchlines later on for their willingness to make a buck at the cost of content. What this did was open the door for music blogs to jump in and give readers a new place to figure out what’s new and good in the world of tunes.

Most of the bigger/more general music blogs (Pitchfork, Stereogum, Gorilla vs Bear) will never be the first ones to break a new artist, but they will be quick to tell you when known artists have new works available or coming out soon. Smaller, niche blogs (The Fader, Xlr8r, Valerie), however, will cultivate their sites like boutiques of taste, and always look for what’s next in music, as opposed to what’s now.

Filtering through sites like this takes a decent amount of work, however, and is for the dedicated music fan. Lesser enthusiasts need not apply.

“Sampling”

The Somali method is for the most hardcore of the hardcore. People who don’t want to wait for the media to tell them what’s what, and would rather just “sample” it for themselves, hit the internet hard and heavy for albums that leak weeks, sometimes months, ahead of their release.

“Sampling” these albums is not for the faint of heart. It takes a general sense of music knowledge, music news, ability to follow the right websites and some technical know how. Bittorrent (and once upon a time, Oink…RIP) is a hotbed for many music leaks as they hit, but since it’s tough to mask your IP address if you’re not in a private community, it’s easier to “sample” the same album using RapidShare, MegaUpload or Mediafire. (In case you’re wondering, avoid RapidShare at all costs, use Mediafire whenever possible…you’ll save like 5 years of your life).

Generally the best place to “sample” these links to new album leaks are in the threads music-related forums. This could be a forum for an artist, a record label, a genre, or just music in general, but people always start an upload thread full of links for you to troll.

There are also blogs and sites that keep track of the latest leaks. Bolachas Gratis is probably the most famous of the bunch, famously hopping from blog service to blog service, finding a new home to post links to albums for you to “sample.” Nodata.tv aims to do something similar, while there’s another site, Did It Leak, that just lists albums it’s seen floating around the internet. They even have a Twitter feed.

These days, once you have an album title, its as simple as visiting Google Blog Search, MAYBE typing an album name in the search bar in quotes, and MAYBE adding a 2009 and “+rar” or “+zip” to the search string (NO IDEA what those mean!). Search around for a few bit blogs that may have a link, and bam—new music to “sample”.

This is undoubtedly the best method for pure discovery, because it lets you chase down the latest and greatest in music without being tainted by anyone else’s opinion or tastes. But it also requires an obsessive, nerdish approach to music fandom that may have ramifications on your social life. Not to mention a total disregard for the economics of the music business, and for the needs of artists to be remunerated for their work. So, you know, proceed with caution.


Listening Test: It’s music tech week at Gizmodo.

Livio Unveils Pandora-Compatible Radio

Livio_Radio.jpg
Pandora over Wi-Fi is nothing new, but dedicated gadgets are few and far between. Livio aims to change that with the Livio Radio, which the company calls “the first and only dedicated device to offer Pandora’s signature ‘thumbs up, thumbs down’ controls on both the front panel and a remote.”

The Livio Radio lets Pandora users customize the programming they receive across any genre without having to pay a monthly fee. “Pandora’s listeners are increasingly using Pandora off of the PC, so we’re always looking for new products that make that easy to do, and have wide appeal for listeners,” said Jessica Steel, Pandora’s senior vice president of business development. “The Livio Radio is a great way to bring Pandora into the home.”

The Livio Radio features a detailed LCD with a signal strength meter, a large knob that controls volume as well as menu navigation, and a headphone jack for private listening. The unit costs $150 and is available direct from the manufacturer’s Web site. It will also look great next to that other tabletop radio you already bought.

iTunes Store’s new pricing scheme affects the charts, that Lightspeed Champion guy expresses surprise

An interesting sidenote on the intersection of music and commerce: Billboard reported last week that the iTunes Store’s new variable pricing plan has had a bit of an impact on sales rankings on individual tracks, giving $.99 songs an advantage over their $1.29 counterparts. According to the magazine, numbers for Wednesday, April 8, show that the iTunes Top 100 chart had 40 songs at the $1.29 price point, and 60 at $0.99 — the premium songs slid an average of 5.3 places, while the $0.99 songs gained roughly 2.5 chart positions. On Thursday the trend continued, with the 53 songs priced at $0.99 rising roughly 1.66 places on the chart, while the remaining songs — priced at $1.29 — lost an average of two chart positions. None of which answers the most pressing question: When will Miley Cyrus’s reign of terror come to an end?

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iTunes Store’s new pricing scheme affects the charts, that Lightspeed Champion guy expresses surprise originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 12 Apr 2009 21:06:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iTunes Store now infected with variable pricing, Amazon still $0.99

As promised, variable pricing has now been implemented at the iTunes music store. Already, we’re seeing most of the top 10 singles and 33 of the top 100 hitting the top price-point of $1.29 (encoded as DRM-free 256kbps AAC). Interesting as Amazon’s uncomfortably similar top 10 list has all these tracks priced at $0.99 (encoded as DRM-free 256kbps VBR MP3). A handful of tracks (nine in the top 100) do hit the higher $1.29 price further down Amazon’s list. Now, if you believe Steve (someone who originally postured against this price structure), then it appears that the music labels are charging Apple more for the rights to sell its music than Amazon based on this quote attributed to Jobs in the Apple press release from January:

in April, based on what the music labels charge Apple, songs on iTunes will be available at one of three price points-69 cents, 99 cents and $1.29-with many more songs priced at 69 cents than $1.29.

Regardless, we know where we’ll be purchasing our Miley Cyrus from now on.

[Thanks, Jesse]

Read — January “Changes Coming to the iTunes Store” press release
Read — iTunes top songs [Warning: iTunes App link]
Read — Amazon top songs

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iTunes Store now infected with variable pricing, Amazon still $0.99 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 07 Apr 2009 04:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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